Home Health Brain Drain Reduces Abuja National Hospital Workforce to 2,500
HealthNews

Brain Drain Reduces Abuja National Hospital Workforce to 2,500

457

The National Hospital in Abuja said the health sector’s brain drain has reduced its workforce from 3,000 to 2,500—about a 17 per cent loss. The hospital said this is despite its 25 years of medical breakthroughs and significant staff expansion.

The Chief Medical Director of the National Hospital, Muhammad Raji, discussed these challenges in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Abuja.

“If not for the brain drain affecting our workforce, we would be talking about 3,000 today,” he said.

“The migration of healthcare professionals from Nigeria to other countries has reached alarming levels, posing challenges for maintaining adequate staffing in Nigerian hospitals.

“It’s not easy to get as many healthcare workers as we need, especially with the increasing number of professionals migrating abroad,” he noted.

However, he hoped to reverse the trend through innovative collaborations with the Nigerian diaspora.

“The hospital has established partnerships allowing Nigerian medical professionals working abroad to return on a rotational basis.

“These professionals spend two weeks here and then return at their convenience, benefiting them and our healthcare system,” he explained.

West Africa Weekly reported that owing to the unfavourable working conditions of health practitioners, who are often overworked and underpaid, many have fled and are seeking to leave the country.

It will be recalled that Dr Fatima Kyari, the Registrar of the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), revealed that in 2023, only 58,000 doctors out of 130,000 officially accredited medical practitioners renewed their annual practising licences, which is a stark reflection of the brain drain plaguing the nation’s health sector.

Also, Faruk Abubakar, the Registrar of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Nigeria (NMCN), recently disclosed that in 2023, more than 15,000 nurses and midwives left Nigeria in pursuit of better opportunities, a reason for which the council devised stringent rules to trap nurses.

Read More:

About The Author

Related Articles

NewsPolitics

Cotê D’Ivoire: Thousands Rally in Abidjan as Opposition Demands Electoral Reforms Ahead of October Election

Thousands of opposition supporters gathered in Abidjan on Saturday, May 31, to...

News

Togo Stops Issuing Mining Permits to Reform Outdated Mining Code

Togo has suspended the issuance of new mining permits for prospecting and...

News

ICYMI: Ghana Shuts Down Washington Embassy Over Visa Fraud Scandal

Ghana has temporarily closed its embassy in Washington, D.C., following the uncovering...

In a ministerial meeting of the Confederation of Sahel States (AES) held in Bamako on January 16, 2025, key decisions emerging from the session include establishing a Regional Investment Bank and launching transformative infrastructure projects across member states.
News

Confederation of Sahel States Moves to Establish Joint Judicial Body

The Confederation of Sahel States (CSS), comprising Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso,...